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You are here: Home / Archives for Articles

Articles

Find all articles across all article series listed in reverse chronological order.

by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment

Using a Design FMEA

Using a Design FMEA

How building reliability into the equipment design will dramatically improve your profitability.

Part 2 of 5

Products and equipment start with a design. The functions and performance occur or do not occur according to the capabilities designed into the system.

I learned early in my career, as a manufacturing engineer, that some products were much easier to manufacture (less yield loss) than others, and it was often the design of the product that made the difference. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Maintenance and Reliability, on Maintenance Reliability Tagged With: Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA)

by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment

The Downside of a Fault Tolerant System

The Downside of a Fault Tolerant System

Maintaining high reliability or availability is a marked advantage for any system. A system that achieves the ability to avoid system downtime due to a single failure event, is essential in many applications. Yet, the fault tolerant capability comes at a price.

A system that achieves the ability to avoid system downtime due to a single failure event, is essential in many applications. Yet, the fault tolerant capability comes at a price.

Here is a short list and brief description of fault tolerant design disadvantages:

Masking or obscuring low-level failures

The nature of a fault tolerance design is to continue to operate normally even with a component failure.

Thus if the ability to detect a component failure relies on a loss of function or capability, it may be difficult to detect the failure. This sets the stage for a second component failure to cause a system downing event. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, CRE Preparation Notes, Reliability in Design and Development Tagged With: Fault tolerance

by Fred Schenkelberg 11 Comments

Nevada Charts to Gather Data

Nevada Charts to Gather Data

A common and poor technique to gather field data is to count the number of returns by week or month. This can provide a graph showing the number of returns over time.

It hides information you need to understand your field failures.

Let’s take a look at a way to gather the same field failure data and retain the critical information necessary for time to failure analysis. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Musings on Reliability and Maintenance Topics, on Product Reliability Tagged With: Field data analysis, Nevada charts

by Kirk Gray Leave a Comment

Why success with HALT begins long before doing HALT

Why success with HALT begins long before doing HALT

Implementing a new reliability development paradigm in a company which is using traditional, standards-based testing can be a perilous journey.

It is especially true with introducing HALT (Highly Accelerated Life Test) in which strength against stress, and not quantifying electronics lifetimes is the new metric.  Because of this significant change in test orientation, a critical factor for success begins with educating the company’s top  [Read more…]

Filed Under: Accelerated Reliability, Articles, on Product Reliability Tagged With: Highly Accelerated Life Testing (HALT)

by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment

Two Proportions Hypothesis Testing

Two Proportions Hypothesis Testing

In the article, Hypothesis Tests for Proportion, the comparison is between a given value and the sample. In this case, let’s compare two populations. We take a sample which provides a proportion representing each population and determines if the populations are different from each other based on the two samples.

The exact solution uses the Binomial distribution, yet when np and 1 – np are greater than 5, then we can use a normal approximation for the test statistic and critical value. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, CRE Preparation Notes, Probability and Statistics for Reliability Tagged With: Hypothesis testing

by James Kovacevic Leave a Comment

Incorporating Reliability into Your Future

Incorporating Reliability into Your Future

How building reliability into the equipment design will dramatically improve your profitability.

Part 1 of 5

Often time’s equipment is procured, setup and put into operation with a single focus on reducing the initial capital expenditure. This can be a fatal mistake as the reliability of the equipment is built into the design of the equipment. This called the inherent reliability. Once the equipment is designed and installed, there is little the maintenance department can do to improve the inherent reliability. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Maintenance and Reliability, on Maintenance Reliability Tagged With: Product life cycle

by Fred Schenkelberg 2 Comments

Are You Tracking and Reporting Field Failures Well?

Are You Tracking and Reporting Field Failures Well?

Fielded products fail day by day. Customers report these failures generally seeking a way to remedy this issue. Gathering the reported or returned products or confirmed failures is common practice.

Depending on the product a simple replacement or exchange may suffice. For other products, repair or a refund may be appropriate.

In general, and not always, when a product fails in the hands of a customer, the organization designing, manufacturing and distributing the product learns of the failure. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Musings on Reliability and Maintenance Topics, on Product Reliability Tagged With: Field data analysis

by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment

Solving a Reliability Optimization Example

Solving a Reliability Optimization Example

In the previous article, What is Reliability Optimization, we defined the concept. One of the elements of optimization is identifying which elements of a system to focus improvement efforts on.

Simply improving every element of a design may provide an overall improvement of reliability performance.

Given constraints such as time or funding, selecting the specific few elements that would provide the most improvement is key. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, CRE Preparation Notes, Reliability in Design and Development

by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment

Design Reviews with Reliability Matter

Design Reviews with Reliability Matter

On occasion, you and the team sit down to review the design.

The idea is to check the design for any issues with the combined wisdom of the people involved. Or, it may be a status update for the entire team providing a focus on the most important issues and action items.

The review may involve all departments, such as marketing, operations, supplier management, and the design team.

It may involve just you and the electrical engineer in a private meeting. In either case, it is a review and a chance to illuminate salient reliability issues and form a consensus on the appropriate action. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Musings on Reliability and Maintenance Topics, on Product Reliability

by Kirk Gray Leave a Comment

Why HALT is a methodology, not equipment

Why HALT is a methodology, not equipment

It is easy to understand why the term HALT (Highly Accelerated Life Test) is so tightly couple to the equipment called “HALT chambers” systems.  Many do not think they can do HALT processes without a “HALT Chamber”. Many know that Dr. Gregg Hobbs, who coined the term HALT and also HASS (Highly Accelerated Stress Screens), spent much of his life promoting the techniques and was also the founder of two “HALT/HASS” environmental chamber companies. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Accelerated Reliability, Articles, on Product Reliability Tagged With: Highly Accelerated Life Testing (HALT)

by Fred Schenkelberg 2 Comments

What is Reliability Optimization?

What is Reliability Optimization?

Delivering the best reliability performance within the various constraints imposed.

Without constraints such as budget, time to market, customer expectation, product functional capabilities, and product weight, you certainly could design and deliver a highly reliable product.

There always are constraints.

In the Oliver Wendall Holmes poem, The One Hoss Shay, the deacon procures the strongest oak, the supplest leather, and the best of best materials. Cost was not a constraint. And the shay lasted 100 years to the day.

If the technology permits there may be stronger or more durable components available for a price, yet cost is often a limiting factor. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, CRE Preparation Notes, Reliability in Design and Development

by Fred Schenkelberg 4 Comments

Key Elements for Your Project Specific Reliability Plan

Key Elements for Your Project Specific Reliability Plan

A plan is a guide or roadmap for intended action.

A reliability plan is also a collection of specific tasks and milestones and enhanced with a rationale to allow the entire team fully understand their role accomplishing the reliability objectives.

The plan is a way to achieve the desired business objectives. Meaning the product is reliable enough to meet customer expectations, minimize warranty expenses, and garner market acceptance. The plan is just a plan, it is the accomplishment of the tasks, the decision which improves the design, the signals monitored that stabilize the supply chain and assembly process, that make the difference.

A plan without action is not worth the effort. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Musings on Reliability and Maintenance Topics, on Product Reliability

by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment

Deciding What Should Have Fault Tolerance

Deciding What Should Have Fault Tolerance

In some circumstances, it is desirable to ensure the system continues to operate even if there is an internal failure. An aircraft navigation system should be able to operate even if an internal dc-dc regulator fails, for example.

Not everything within some systems benefits by being fault tolerant.

For example, a failure of a cabin reading light over a passenger seat is not critical to the safe operation of the aircraft, thus is likely not created to be fault tolerant. One criterion to determine what should be fault tolerant is the criticality of the function the system provides.

This also applies to specific subsystems within a system allowing some elements to be created fault tolerant and others within the system not. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, CRE Preparation Notes, Reliability in Design and Development Tagged With: Fault tolerance

by Fred Schenkelberg 2 Comments

The Derating & Safety Margin Manual

The Derating & Safety Margin Manual

Do you have one in your organization? Is it used regularly?

If not, your organization’s products are likely not as reliable as they should be. You are shipping products that are not as robust nor reliable as your customers deserve.

Derating and Safety Factors, defined earlier, provide a means to select components or create design features that have sufficient margin to accommodate variation in use and strength over time.

So why are these tools routinely ignored or given only fleeting attention? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Articles, Musings on Reliability and Maintenance Topics, on Product Reliability Tagged With: Derating, Safety margin/factor guidelines

by Kirk Gray Leave a Comment

Why Parametric Variation Can Lead to Failures and HALT Can Help

Why Parametric Variation Can Lead to Failures and HALT Can Help

Many reliability engineers have discovered HALT will quickly find the weaknesses and reliability risks in electronic and electromechanical systems from the capability of thermal cycling and vibration to create rapid mechanical fatigue in electronic assemblies. Assemblies that have latent defects such as cold solder or cracked solder joints, loose connectors or mechanical fasteners, or component package defects can be brought to a detectable, or patent, condition by which we can observe and potentially improve the robustness of an electronics system.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Accelerated Reliability, Articles, on Product Reliability Tagged With: Highly Accelerated Life Testing (HALT)

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